| Literature DB >> 26554314 |
Gemma Flores Mateo1, Esther Granado-Font, Carme Ferré-Grau, Xavier Montaña-Carreras.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To our knowledge, no meta-analysis to date has assessed the efficacy of mobile phone apps to promote weight loss and increase physical activity.Entities:
Keywords: apps; intervention; mHealth; mobile phone; obesity; physical activity
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26554314 PMCID: PMC4704965 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.4836
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Flowchart for the selection of the articles in this meta-analysis.
Characteristics of included clinical trials.
| Author, | Country | Study design | Population | SSa | Men, | Age in years, | Study | Outcome |
| Lee, 2010 [ | South Korea | CCSb | Voluntary participants from the obese clinic at the fitness center, Seoul | 36 | N/Ac | 28.5 | 6 weeks | Body weight, |
| Turner-McGrievy, 2011 [ | United States | RCTe | Overweight and obese men and women | 96 | 24.7 | 44 | 6 months | BMI, physical activity |
| Kirwan, 2012 [ | Australia | MCCTf | General population | 200 | 52 | 40 | 3 months | Physical activity |
| Carter, 2013 [ | United Kingdom | RCT | Overweight volunteers | 86 | 33 | 41.2 | 6 months | Body weight, BMI |
| Allen, 2013 [ | United States | RCT | Overweight and obese men and women | 35 | 22.1 | 44.9 | 6 months | Body weight, BMI, waist circumference |
| Brindal, 2013 [ | Australia | RCT | Adult women with self-reported BMI >25 kg/m2 | 58 | 0 | 42 | 2 months | Body weight |
| Laing, 2014 [ | United States | RCT | Primary care patients with BMI >25 kg/m2 | 212 | 27 | 43.3 | 6 months | Body weight |
| Glynn, 2014 [ | Ireland (West) | RCT | Primary care patients | 90 | 36 | 44 | 2 months | Body weight, BMI, step count |
| Smith, 2014 [ | Australia | RCT | Adolescent boys in low-income communities | 361 | 100 | 12.7 | 20 weeks | BMI, waist circumference |
| Hebden, 2014 [ | Australia | RCT | Students and staff, Australian University | 41 | 19 | 22.6 | 3 months | Body weight, BMI, MPAg, VPAh |
| Partridge, 2015 [ | Australia | RCT | Participants at risk of excess weight gain | 250 | 38 | 27.2 | 9 months | Body weight, BMI, MPA, VPA |
aSS: sample size.
bCCS: case-control study.
cN/A: not applicable.
dBMI: body mass index.
eRCT: randomized controlled trial.
fMCCT: matched case-control trial.
gMPA: moderate physical activity.
hVPA: vigorous physical activity.
Characteristics of intervention types and description of apps.
| Author, | Outcome | Intervention type | Description of app | Control group treatment |
| Lee, 2010 [ | Body weight, BMIa | Mobile phone app + usual care | Smart Diet app: provides a personalized diet profile; promotes knowledge about nutrition using a diet game | Not described |
| Turner-McGrievy, 2011 [ | BMI, physical activity | Mobile phone app + podcast + Twitter messages | Diet and physical activity-monitoring app (2010 version of FatSecret’s Calorie Counter app) | Podcast only |
| Kirwan, 2012 [ | Physical activity | Mobile phone app + 10,000 steps program | Self-monitoring and self-reported physical activity levels (iStepLog) | 10,000 steps program |
| Carter, 2013 [ | Body weight, BMI, physical activity | Mobile phone app | Self-monitoring with managed intervention delivered by (MMM) app | Self-monitoring by using a food diary + a calorie-counting book |
| Allen, 2013 [ | Body weight, BMI, waist circumference | Mobile phone app + intensive counseling | Lose It! (weight-loss app) | Intensive counseling |
| Brindal, 2013 [ | Body weight | Mobile phone app + Celebrity Slim program | Support app: My Meals + My Weight + My Task | Celebrity Slim program alone |
| Laing, 2014 [ | Body weight | Mobile phone app + usual care | MyFitnessPal app | Counseling about activities to lose weight + one-page educational handout on healthy eating |
| Glynn, 2014 [ | Body weight, BMI, step count | Mobile phone app + usual care | Accupedo-Pro Pedometer app | Physical activity goals and information on the benefits of exercise + Be active physical activity promotion brochure |
| Smith, 2014 [ | BMI, waist circumference | Mobile phone app + parent newsletters, seminars, sport sessions, lunchtime physical activity-mentoring sessions, teachers attend two 6-h workshops, and one fitness instructor session | Physical activity monitoring, recording of fitness challenge results, tailored motivational messaging, goal setting for physical activity and screen time | Traditional intervention (ie, regularly scheduled school sports and physical education lessons) |
| Hebden, 2014 [ | Body weight, BMI, MPAb, VPAc | Mobile phone app + SMSdtext messages + email messages + Internet forums + usual care | Four mobile phone apps per behavior | A 10-page printed booklet |
| Partridge, 2015 [ | Body weight, BMI, MPA, VPA | Mobile phone app + SMS text messages + email messages + Internet forums + community blog + usual care | Mobile phone apps that provide education and allow self-monitoring | Control participants received a mailed two-page handout, four text messages, and access to a website |
aBMI: body mass index.
bMPA: moderate physical activity.
cVPA: vigorous physical activity.
dSMS: short message service.
Figure 2Meta-analysis of the net change in body weight (kg) associated with mobile phone app intervention, expressed as the change during the mobile phone app intervention minus the change during the control diet. The area of each square is proportional to the inverse of the variance of the weighted mean difference. Horizontal lines represent 95% CIs. Diamonds represent pooled estimates from inverse variance (IV) weighted random-effects models.
Figure 3Meta-analysis of the net change in BMI (kg/m2) associated with mobile phone app intervention, expressed as the change during the mobile app intervention minus the change during the control diet. The area of each square is proportional to the inverse of the variance of the weighted mean difference. Horizontal lines represent 95% CIs. Diamonds represent pooled estimates from inverse variance (IV) weighted random-effects models.
Figure 4Meta-analysis of the net change in physical activity associated with mobile phone app intervention, expressed as the change during the mobile app intervention minus the change during the control intervention. The area of each square is proportional to the inverse of the variance of the standardized mean difference. Horizontal lines represent 95% CIs. Diamonds represent pooled estimates from inverse variance (IV) weighted random-effects models.
Figure 5Summary of review authors’ assessments of risk of bias for each Cochrane item and each included study.